Ozuna Setlist 2026 — Songs, Order & Running Time
Ozuna setlist — current cycle, song by song
The Ozuna live blueprint settles into a roughly 100-minute run with 22 to 28 songs and no traditional opener on most arena dates. Lights drop, a recorded interlude with cosmos-and-galaxy visuals references the Nibiru and Cosmo album worlds, and Ozuna walks out for the opener — typically a Cosmo or Ozutochi cut with the full band on stage. The early block leans on the most recent two albums to anchor the new-material credibility, then pivots into Odisea within the first 15 minutes — Se Preparó usually first, then Tu Foto with the entire room carrying the falsetto chorus unprompted. El Farsante lands as the first emotional anchor; the live arrangement extends the bridge into a 30–45-second crowd-vocal pause where Ozuna steps back from the mic. The Te Boté remix run is the loudest singalong of the night across most cycles — the live arrangement folds in Bad Bunny, Nicky Jam, Casper Mágico, Darell, and Nio García verses as backing-track features while Ozuna handles his own original hook and the second verse. La Modelo with Cardi B continues the reggaeton-pop crossover stretch. The Aura era — Vaina Loca, Única, Quiero Más, Síguelo Bailando — runs through the middle hour with the brass section out front. Nibiru opens a darker stretch — the title track, Eres Top, Hasta Que Salga el Sol — with the cosmic visual era taking over the stage. The Los Dioses block — Antes, RD, Reloj — pivots into a hands-up arena moment with red and gold lighting and the Anuel AA verses on the backing track. The late-show high-energy run pulls Taki Taki for the recognized-globally singalong; Caramelo follows for the post-pandemic-era anthem with the call-and-response on the chorus carrying without backing vocal; Adicto with Anuel AA and Tainy lands as the late-night perreo statement. The encore varies night to night — sometimes Una Flor for the romantic ballad statement, sometimes a stripped-back El Farsante reprise, sometimes a fan-request audible from the front rows — before closing on a perreo finale that the room treats as a guaranteed call-and-response moment. The San Juan home dates at Coliseo de Puerto Rico run slightly longer, rotate two to three additional Puerto Rico-specific catalogue cuts, and pull in occasional guest appearances from Anuel AA, J Balvin, or Daddy Yankee depending on who is on the island. International dates lock the structure tighter for production cues. For the exact setlist at a specific show, setlist.fm posts crowd-submitted song-by-song lists within hours of the encore.
Ozuna 2026 Tour Setlist Structure
Ozuna, a reggaeton act, has no confirmed dates on sale right now, so the song order below reflects how reggaeton headline sets of this size are typically paced.
Recent Ozuna concerts have averaged between 18 and 24 songs spread across roughly 90 to 120 minutes of performance time (excluding opener). The shows typically follow this rough structure:
- Opener (song 1 to 2). A high-energy hit to set the tone.
- Hit block (song 3 to 7). A run of the most-streamed singles.
- Acoustic / storytelling moment (song 8 to 10). Stripped-back arrangements and banter.
- Deep-cut set (song 11 to 15). Fan favorites and newer album tracks.
- Peak run (song 16 to 20). The dancefloor anthems and biggest singalongs.
- Encore (song 21 to 24). A 2 to 3 song encore featuring the signature closer.
Does the Ozuna Setlist Change Night to Night?
The core of the Ozuna 2026 setlist — the singles and the staging — stays consistent across the tour so production cues work from night to night. Smaller changes (a deep cut swap, a city-specific cover, or an acoustic surprise) happen on some nights. For the exact setlist from a specific Ozuna show, check fan-submitted setlists on Setlist.fm after the concert.
Ozuna Setlist — FAQ
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About Ozuna
Juan Carlos Ozuna Rosado was born in the Bronx on March 13, 1992 to a Dominican mother and a Puerto Rican father, and moved with his mother to San Juan as a young child after his father — a backup dancer in Vico C's early stage shows — was killed when Juan Carlos was three. He grew up in the Río Piedras neighborhood, sang in school talent shows from grade school onward, and started writing his own reggaeton verses in his early teens. He uploaded his first single — Imaginando — to YouTube in 2012, and built a following slowly across the next several years through SoundCloud uploads, regional features, and the Puerto Rico club circuit. The 2016 single Si No Te Quiere with De La Ghetto pushed him into the Latin radio rotation; Dile Que Tú Me Quieres landed on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart and gave him his first widely recognized solo hit. He signed with VP Entertainment under manager Vicente Saavedra and joined the broader Dimelo Flow and Hear This Music collaboration ecosystem alongside Anuel AA, Bad Bunny, J Balvin, and Daddy Yankee. The August 2017 debut album Odisea — 20 tracks, 16 of which charted on Billboard's Hot Latin Songs — became one of the highest-charting Spanish-language reggaeton albums in Billboard history at the time, sat at No. 1 on the Top Latin Albums chart for a record-setting run, and earned him a Latin Grammy nomination plus multiple Billboard Latin Music Awards. The Te Boté remix in early 2018 — featuring Bad Bunny, Nicky Jam, Casper Mágico, Darell, and Nio García — became one of the defining reggaeton tracks of the decade and topped the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart. The August 2018 follow-up Aura — featuring Cardi B, Akon, and Romeo Santos — debuted at No. 7 on the Billboard 200, the highest debut for an all-Spanish album at that point. The DJ Snake collaboration Taki Taki with Cardi B and Selena Gomez later that year reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs and the top of the global YouTube charts. Nibiru followed in November 2019 and ENOC in September 2020. The joint album Los Dioses with Anuel AA in January 2021 debuted at No. 1 on Top Latin Albums and produced the global hit Antes — itself a streaming-era classic. Ozutochi arrived in September 2022 and Cosmo in November 2023, the latter widely treated as a creative reset that braided reggaeton with R&B, Afrobeats, and Latin pop textures across roughly two dozen tracks. He has performed at every major Latin music awards ceremony — Latin Grammys, Latin Billboards, Premios Juventud, Premio Lo Nuestro — and collaborated across a wide spread including Karol G, Rosalía, J Balvin, Anuel AA, Daddy Yankee, Wisin & Yandel, Nicky Jam, Romeo Santos, and Akon. The Aura Tour, Nibiru World Tour, and ENOC-era arena and stadium runs have anchored a touring schedule that returns regularly to Madison Square Garden, Coliseo de Puerto Rico, Crypto.com Arena, Foro Sol, Movistar Arena Buenos Aires, and WiZink Center Madrid. He operates through Dimelo Vi management and VP Entertainment alongside touring through the major North American and European promoter networks.
